I have been working at LanguageLine Solutions full-time (less than a year)

Pros

Work at home, you can sleep till 5 mins before your shift starts, you can do your own things while the call is holding, no need to commute to work. when your shift end, you're off work! Challenging, interesting, learn new stuff everyday while doing the job. Good for an entry level job, people who doesn't have any experience will learn tons of things in a short time.

Cons

Calls might be long that pass your shift, your break, your lunch. Really hard to change schedule.Some client might yell at you, treat you like a interpretation machine. Have to be really patient all the time, no matter how hard this call is, you have to overcome it as soon as the next call start. Have to be professional all the time. no sick time off.

Advice to ManagementAdvice

should have better health insurance benefit and paid time off, we are the first person that perform our company services to our clients everyday. we deserve more benefit and appreciation.

Company policies are relatively complete and available for those who hunt for them. I happened to have worked with an amicable SLS (senior language specialist) and was happy to have worked under her, although I felt that she did not uphold and enforce what should be required of an interpreter.

Cons

Threshold for job is low, quality of service is sad (because they don't do anything to attract good employees), appalling working conditions (sick and losing your voice will result in an "unexcused absence"), disregard of standard working conditions of an interpreter, lack of human contact (except when they need to tell you you are in trouble!), a lack of motivation for employees to do their job well.

I might be the first person here to criticize the quality of service provided by the interpreters, even though I was one of the interpreters at this company. Please understand that I have no ill feelings toward any fellow interpreters working here, but as I have been on the giving end of service (and did what I could), and as I have been an observer of said service (the first day of work involved listening in to co-workers' calls), and as I have also been on the receiving end of service (my own family often requires the help of an interpreter, and often I am not authorized to interpret for them, so I sit down and listen in), I honestly feel that the quality of service is quite disappointing. I will obtain a master degree for translation and interpretation in a few months, therefore I would like to offer some of my thought on what I believe went wrong:

1. Initial training concentrated on company procedures and protocol, but no test was required for employees to demonstrate that they understand said procedures and protocol. I have observed many interpreters being rude, taking over the call from the client and LEP, etc.

2. Many, as a matter of fact, more than 75% of the interpreters I spoke to, felt that they were very inadequately prepared for the job. One interpreter told the patient there was a problem with her spleen while another told her it was the pancreas, when the correct answer was in fact yet another organ. The interpretation quality of many interpreters working for LLS was not remotely passing, yet they are handling medical and court situations. Sometimes, it is quite clear that these interpreters lack linguistic proficiencies, and other times, I could tell the interpreter would have done a much better job had he or she received proper training.

3. The compensation package is simply unattractive to truly qualifying interpreters, unless they do not mind working at home for a little bit of pocket money (some do so because someone else puts bread on the table in the family and their income is less important, and working at home is convenient). The company should be well aware of how awful their compensation package is, and I really have no need to say more on this subject.

4. An interpreter is not supposed to work non-stop for hours and then enjoy a 15-minute break. Again, the company should have a good idea about how an interpretation works. If you work somewhere else, you get bathroom breaks on top of your mid-morning 15-minute break (I simply haven't worked at another company that would tell me otherwise, so why should LLS treat their employees like they are some streamline workers chained to their workstation?). When working consecutively, an interpreter needs a small break every hour. Even just 5 minutes is better than nothing.

5. The company has employees across the US. Why can't LLS organize some kind of "meet up" event once a year around major metropolis such as SF, LA, NYC, Chicago, etc? It doesn't cost much and is a nice way to tell the employees "hey we actually exist! let's get some human contact!" Sometimes, people forget that they deal with real humans, even if they don't get to meet face to face. It'd be a good reminder to the managers and employees alike, that the other side has blood and flesh too.

6. Last but not least, let me add this: I happened to have worked for a world-renowned client of LLS, and they recently switched from LLS to another company. The reason? Their doctors and nurses used to have to dial 9-1-800-XXX-XXXX everytime they need an LLS interpreter, but now they are with a different telephone interpreting company, all they need to dial is THREE numbers! LLS could have done a little more to provide a thoughtful, simple way for their clients to reach them. But alas, they did not.

Advice to ManagementAdvice

Please read the pros and cons here, some of your employees finally have a chance to write their hearts out here. Consult with experts in the industry (you are located in Monterey, the language capital. There are enough language institutes around for your to ask for some help).

I have been working at LanguageLine Solutions full-time (more than 5 years)

Pros

Working from home is the only pro, but lack of compensation and daily mental abuse by clients and company staff soon outweighs it

Cons

No flexibility in schedule, no sick time off, compensation below industry standards, treated like crap most of the time, staff and managers unprofessional, health insurance is a joke, stay away from this company, good to work only as a resume filler

Advice to ManagementAdvice

Management needs no advice, they treat interpreters no better than cattle at the slaughterhouse, that's why turnover rate is 90 percent, DO NOT WORK FOR THIS COMPANYThe pay is minmum wage vs how long you stay on the call, what they don't tell you is most calls are 10 min or less so you'll be earning minimum wage